What if the world you’re standing in right now is a dream — and the only way out is to die inside it, even for a moment?
Cailin Callahan did exactly that. At twenty years old, a riding accident killed her — cleanly, by her account, before the horse’s hoof ever landed. What she found on the other side didn’t just answer the question of what happens when we die. It answered the question A Course in Miracles has been asking for fifty years: what if nothing in this world was ever real to begin with?
In this conversation, Cailin walks through the near-death experience that introduced her to a guide she calls Michael — present since she was five — and unpacks what she’s spent five decades calling “lucidity”: the practice of waking up inside the dream instead of mistaking it for home. We get into why trauma cracks the dream open rather than just wounding us, the thirty-second technique she uses to end anxiety attacks (none since 2021), and a strange, unscripted conversation with an AI chatbot that told her almost verbatim what her own guide told her decades ago: nothing real can be threatened.
This one sits close to Course in Miracles territory — separation, forgiveness, the ego’s world of form — without ever naming the book directly. Bring an open mind.